There was a silence and then another sigh. âSo am I. She hasn't been easy, you know. I did my best. The boys are no trouble.'
The words âIt's not my fault!' shrieked into Kitty's mind. Paula made her feel as if Kitty had sold her faulty goods that she'd been gallantly making the best of and failing. She was not going to accept any blame. If the right thing to do had been to give Madeleine up for adoption, surely no-one but Paula was responsible for what went awry after that? No-one had forced her to take the child, and Kitty bit her lip to stop herself from saying it. âSo can you come?' she asked instead, âit's almost at the furthest end of Cornwall . . .' Telling Paula that was curiously satisfying.
Lily crouched on the old pink Lloyd Loom chair in the corner of her bedroom, with her fingers in her ears blocking out the sounds of pain from downstairs. Her wetsuit, hanging over the back of the wardrobe door, was dripping cold salt water onto the dark blue carpet and there would be a white-edged stain when it dried. Her mum would be angry, and she'd have to get the Vax spray and give it a scrubbing. She hated cleaning marks off carpet, hated the texture of it, the friction of the rough wool scraping harsh against the soft skin of her palm. Once, she'd rubbed her hand hard against it, deliberately making it itch and burn, seeing how bad it could be so she would get immune to it. The feeling had made her toes tingle, her legs weak. And it had made no difference.
She watched the stain getting bigger and bigger and sensed the noises down below getting more and more desperate and her heart thudded horribly. It was all her fault. Madeleine had run into the sea to be with her. She should have let her take the surfboard and just get on with it, not fought her off like that. The sea was much too cold for anyone to go more than knee-deep without 5mm of neoprene covering them, and Madeleine would only have paddled a few feet further out and then come giggling back up the beach, shivering. Or would she? The reason Lily had fought her was because you couldn't be sure. Madeleine had a mad streak, something reckless and crazy that Lily really envied but was also afraid of.
Madeleine had told her about hitch-hiking through Italy and stealing food from supplies left on restaurant doorsteps at four in the morning. She said she'd tied her younger brother to one of the Brighton Pier uprights when there was no-one around in winter and gone away and left him, watching from the promenade till the tide went right to the top of his legs. And she'd told her about the Irish wake she'd gone to where the dead man had been dressed in his best suit and propped up in his favourite armchair so that he wouldn't miss the fun â and Madeleine said she'd sat a small boy on the cold lap and told him to tweak the stiff dead nose to wake him up. Lily hoped things like that were made up just for effect, but she was afraid they weren't. She'd only laughed at it all because she didn't want to upset her and make her leave. Madeleine never mentioned friends. She seemed to have done most of her living by herself so far, as if she couldn't be bothered to collect people and have to trail them around with her like baggage. She'd collected George now, though. Or maybe he'd collected her.
Cautiously, Lily took her fingers out of her ears. There was silence now. Either it was all over or Madeleine had decided shouting and yelling wasn't any use. Or maybe it was worse and she'd died like they always did in Charles Dickens. She crept to the top of the stairs and listened. She wanted to go down and help, but felt scared. Seeing a baby born in real life and not just on the biology-lab video had to be something you didn't miss if you got the chance, but in the bio lab the woman in the film had smiled and grunted a bit and that was all. She hadn't howled like a lost dog.
Her mother rushed past her, making her jump. âAre you coming down, Lily? Madeleine might like yours to be the hand she hangs onto. After all, you're the one who's got closest to her.'
Lily held onto the banister rail, swinging her foot as if she was still deciding whether to go up or down. âApart from George. She'll probably want George now.'
Kitty came back up a few steps and put her arm round her. âPerhaps, but let's go and see, shall we?'
âYeah OK. After all it's my niece or nephew.'
George and Ben were sitting out on the sea wall, smoking like a nervous pair of true labour-ward first-timers. Glyn sent them off to the fallen tree in the lane to meet the ambulance and direct the paramedics to the house. He felt an urgent need for order, for someone with a uniform to take charge and sort everything out. Madeleine looked like a strapped-down animal, heaving and writhing on the rug, turning one way and then another, sometimes getting up and squatting, and then rearing herself up onto all fours. Kitty had produced Lily and Petroc with the full assistance of the National Health's pain-relief systems, propped up on the right sort of solid bed with a bank of crisp white pillows and a bustling team of beaming, confident nurses. Fathers were welcome but kept at the head end for brow-mopping and contraction-counting and for holding the Evian spray, dealing with the Brahms tapes (or Eric Clapton or whale sounds) and being a useful wrist to grip when pain went beyond the edge. He looked at his watch. Twenty minutes had gone by since Kitty had phoned for help. It was at least twenty-five minutes from the Penzance hospital, or an awful lot more from Truro. He listened hard but couldn't hear a siren. Then suddenly everyone was there. There was the gritty pounding of men running on shingle and Ben dashed round the corner towards the back door, leading a pair of green-uniformed paramedics, each clutching a bagful of items that Glyn prayed were relevant and useful. George, panting, brought up the rear, followed by Rita looking as eager as if she'd just discovered her true vocation.
âNo midwife?' Glyn asked Rita, following her into the house.
âOnly at the hospital. I expect they'll take her there.'
But they didn't. âWe don't move women this far gone in labour; against the rules,' Brian, the older of the two said, assessing Madeleine's condition the second he walked through the sitting-room doorway. âBesides, we'll never get her over that tree in her state.' Madeleine, curled up on her side on the rug, glared at him. The younger one looked panic-stricken. To Kitty's anxious eyes he resembled some sort of hapless youth on day one of work experience. âDon't worry,' the older one said, catching her glance, âit's Trev's first time but I've done a couple of dozen, nothing to it. First off, at least half of you lot can disappear. Don't want a crowd. And me and Trev could murder a cup of tea.' He knelt down next to Madeleine. âOK love, let's see how things are going.'
âI wanted a woman.' Madeleine glared at him, looking as if she might bite if he came too near.
Brian laughed. âSorry to be a disappointment. But I'll do my best. I'm good at it. And just think, it could be worse, they could have sent a doctor. Now they're
worse
than useless.' Madeleine's face tightened into agony once more and she moaned and thrashed around, sending Glyn and Ben scuttling for the kitchen where they collided with Lily on her way to join Madeleine.
âI wouldn't go in there, it's too crowded already,' Glyn told her.
âBut I want to! She might need me! Mum said!' He gripped hold of her wrist to stop her and she tried to twist herself free but Glyn hung on and the two of them danced awkwardly backwards into the kitchen, crashing against the table.
âKitty said she'd ask Madeleine if she wanted you. She'll come and get you if you are.'
âNo! Let me go!'
âMaybe it would be a good idea if you hung on just a bit longer, just in case it's a bit difficult in there . . .â Ben ventured.
âIt's nothing to do with you!' she yelled. âShe's my sister and I want to be with her!'
Glyn let go abruptly and Lily fell back against the fridge. There was a breaking-glass sound from inside it. Lily fled from the kitchen to the sitting-room, flinging open the door and slamming it shut after her.
âSo Madeleine is your oldest daughter?' Ben was clearly puzzled. âI didn't realize. I thought Kitty said she was just someone staying here.'
Glyn opened the fridge and started clearing up the mess that a smashed glass bowl of salad dressing had made. Like Kitty with the egg on the day Madeleine had arrived, he marvelled at how much chaos a small trail of vinaigrette could cause. All the salad vegetables would need to come out, every tomato would have to be washed and it had even splashed over the cartons of milk and apple juice and bottles of water in the door rack. Carefully, he collected up the fragments of glass and started wrapping them in kitchen paper. âShe's Kitty's daughter,' he said at last. He didn't feel the need to volunteer more than that essential basic fact. Anything else was down to Kitty.
âOh I see.' He didn't look as if he did, Glyn thought. âFrom before you?'
âYes.' He reached into the cupboard under the sink and took out a clean J-cloth, rinsed it out and started very slowly wiping the mess from the shelves. He wanted to be out in the vegetable garden. He could be sowing a rocket bed, hoeing between the land-cress lines.
âSo how old is she?' Ben wasn't going to let go. The cogs of his brain could almost be heard grinding gradually faster.
Glyn shrugged. âOh er, early twenties, something like that.'
âSurely you know exactly how old? Has she always lived with you?'
âNo, no she hasn't.' Would the man never give up?
âSo where . . .'
Trev's timid skinny face appeared round the kitchen door. âBrian says please can you hurry up with that tea. He says it's thirsty work and he wants two sugars.'
âComing right up. Look Ben, I'm sorry but if you want to know about Madeleine you're going to have to ask Kitty. After all, she was her baby, so the story's all hers, OK?'
Madeleine's baby boy fought his way into the world and landed in Brian's huge pink hands, where he lay and kicked and glared and drew his first gurgling breath. He didn't cry, but frowned as if he already had a grudge.
âWho's first, Mum or Grandma?' Brian asked once he'd checked the child's airway. Kitty choked back tears. George was blowing his nose noisily and Lily and Rita were weeping happily all over each other. Madeleine just grinned and held out her arms for her child, nuzzling him to her and gently sniffing at his hair, like a mother cat with a kitten. It was almost as if Madeleine herself had been reborn, as a soft, loving, start-again creature, folding the baby to her body as if she'd never handled anything so delicately in her life. She looked up at Kitty and smiled. âWhat do you know?' she whispered, âit was a real live baby in there all the time.'
Kitty laughed, the thought so exactly echoed how she'd felt when Madeleine had been born: that strange near-shock, that the lump pushing her stomach skin from concave to massive really was a miraculously fully-formed miniature human being and not some alien fungusy growth. Back then though, Kitty had had no-one to say it to. âHe's beautiful,' she said, inspecting his tiny perfect fingers with their clean rosy nails.
âHow come their nails are always just the right length?' Rita asked, marvelling at nature's brilliance. âI mean if they're a couple of weeks late you'd think they'd be needing a trim, wouldn't you.'
âI think he's early, actually,' Brian said, making notes on his clipboard. âWouldn't you say so, love?' he asked Madeleine. She shrugged. âSorry, couldn't tell you. He looks OK though. He is, isn't he?'
Brian squeezed her hand. âCourse he is. He's great. What are you going to call him?'
Kitty glanced at Rita and the two of them giggled, sharing an instant understanding that if, as tradition had it, the grateful mother gave him the name of the emergency deliverer, Madeleine was clearly stuck for choice between Trevor and Brian.
âOliver,' Madeleine announced. âThis is Oliver Cochrane Murray.'
âWho is Oliver?' Petroc stood in the doorway, clad in blue striped boxer shorts, a Surfers Against Sewage teeshirt and a very bemused expression. âAnd who is everybody else? Have I missed something?'
Madeleine wouldn't stay in the house. She wanted to go back to the barn with George, who insisted he was more than willing to take care of her. Kitty felt disappointed, still picturing the studio transformed into a nursery. It would only take a day to clear it and paint it, if she really worked and if Petroc and Lily helped. Instead, with Lily she carried across to the barn all the baby items that they'd bought on the trip to Truro. She kept telling herself they would only be across the yard, it wasn't as if she was losing them. And perhaps after a couple of days Madeleine would decide she missed the home comforts of the house. Missed her family.
âWhen's Madeleine's mother coming?' Glyn asked after the second barn trip.
âLater on today. I suppose she could have room two over in the barn.'
âWell it keeps the family together, I suppose.'
â
We're
family too, aren't we?'
Glyn sighed. âNo Kitty we're not. You're living in a dream world. One day soon Madeleine will be gone. There's more than a fifty-fifty chance you won't see her again. She's found out all she needs. It was information she was after, not a whole new family. Sorry to be brutal, but someone had to say it.'
Kitty felt as if someone had picked her up like old paper and crumpled her. âYou're so wrong, Glyn, you've got no idea. Even her baby's got my name . . . You'd feel different if you were her father . . .'
âI might. So maybe you should be talking to the person who
is
Madeleine's father.' He went to put his arms round her but she shook him off roughly. âLook,' he said, âI'm only trying to help you not to get hurt. You're like someone inside out at the moment . . .'